Richard is involved in some activism down under. Maybe he can provide some answers. Guessing it's the middle of the night there right now, but I bet he'll chime in in the AM hours (if he hasn't already).

Excerpt: "Two nuclear reactors have been built at Lucas Heights. The smaller reactor Moata has been mothballed. The larger reactor HIFAR (High Flux Australian Reactor) is over 40 years old (began operations in 1958) and is due to be shut down within the next ten years.

A decision has been made to replace HIFAR with a bigger reactor built in Argentina. This project awaits the drawing up of firm plans for the management of nuclear waste from the reactor. These plans have been set back by the South Australian Government's decision to prohibit importation of intermediate and high level nuclear waste into SA"

From Wikipedia:
>>>Lucas Heights is a suburb in southern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is located 31 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the Sutherland Shire. Lucas Heights is located on the Woronora River, which flows north into the Georges River.

Unusually for a suburb, Lucas Heights does not contain a residential area. The residential area previously part of Lucas Heights was renamed Barden Ridge in 1996 to increase the real estate value of the area, as it would no longer be instantly associated with the HIFAR nuclear reactor.<<<

Interesting that the value of a piece of land can rise or fall by giving it a different name. Maybe Japan should be renamed to "East Asia Islands"?

But more seriously: The Lucas Heights example is a clear indication, indisputable and measurable in Australian Dollars, that despite all propaganda that nuclear power is safe, safe, safe – just like eating bananas, the average australian real-estate consumer thinks differently.

Aye, once an electrical cable gets warm lt's resistance increases, leading it to get warmer…there's only one place it's going after that..
mmkay, 1958.. that makes the cabling a collectors item, if not an antique in most trade circles..

ANSTO lied when said no radioactive material on a 1980's crashed truk.

The Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) has issued a statement saying the 1980 accident did not involve "material or vehicles associated with ANSTO's predecessor, the Australian Atomic Energy Commission (AAEC), nor did it originate from Lucas Heights".
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The ANSTO statement said records from February 1981 state the following:

"The AAEC was not officially concerned with any aspect of the accident involving a truck carrying radioactive materials, insecticide and food which occurred on the Pacific Highway near Laurieton on 4 December 1980. The only indirect AAEC involvement occurred because [AAEC employee, name withheld] was holidaying in the area and he offered his services in an advisory capacity to the Police … "

"Records from April 1981 state the following:

"The sources were not the property of the AAEC, nor were they being consigned to or from the AAEC. They were the property of a 'geophysical' company and do not appear to have suffered any harm.

Makes perfect sense. I've been using Rife technology for several years to treat illness. Dr. Rife was said to have been inspired by Tesla, and to have applied Tesla's discoveries on the microscopic scale.

92,960,000 miles from the earth to the sun, and still the sun causes cancer. Its a great idea to put the same principal on the troposphere, and better yet, make it all for weapons of war on the population. Great minds up to no good at all, these atoms aren't very peaceful after all.

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